
Last modified: 2010-12-03 by ian macdonald
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![[Indigenous Lepcha Tribal Association Flag]](../images/i/in}ilta.gif) image by Chrystian Kretowicz and Eugene Ipavec, 13 February 2010
 
image by Chrystian Kretowicz and Eugene Ipavec, 13 February 2010
Lepcha
Róngkup (children of the Róng) or Mútuncí Róngkup Rumkup (beloved 
children of the Róng and of God)
Aboriginal people of Sikkim, also found 
in the Darjeeling District of West Bengal, the Ilam District of Nepal, 
southwestern Bhutan and Tibet. Numbering @ 50 000 and speaking a Tibeto-Butman 
language (Bodish-Himalayish)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lepcha_people 
http://sikkim.nic.in/north/html/lepcha.htm 
http://home.messiah.edu/~rl1204/
http://www.ethnologue.com/14/show_language.asp?code=LEP 
The flag of the Indigenous Lepcha Tribal Association, an organization of the 
Lepchas in the Indian State of West Bengal with the headquarters in Kalimpong 
(Darjeeling District), can be seen at:
http://my.slideroll.com/galleries/members/ilta/gallery/ilta/?g=0rxmx3q4. The 
logo of the Indigenous Lepcha Tribal Association is presented at:
http://indigenouslepcha-tribalassociation.com/home/?q=node/3, together with 
its constitution.
Chrystian Kretowicz, 6 February 2010
 
![[Bhutia Flag]](../images/i/in}siblac.gif) image by Chrystian Kretowicz and Eugene Ipavec, 13 February 2010
 
image by Chrystian Kretowicz and Eugene Ipavec, 13 February 2010
(In Sikkim: Denzongpa; In Bhutan: Dukpa)
"The Bhutia are ethnic 
Tibetans who speak a Tibetan Dialect fairly mutually intelligible to standard 
Tibetan. Their ancestors migrated to Sikkim, other parts of India and Bhutan 
some time after the 15th century. They migrated through the different passes 
("La" in Tibetan) in the Himalayas. Geographical denotations in the name of 
Bhutias' last names is common. In Northern Sikkim for example, where the Bhutias 
are the majority inhabitants, they are known as the Lachenpas or Lachungpas, 
meaning inhabitants of Lachen or Lachung respectively. Similarly, the Bhutias of 
Sikkim as a whole can be denoted as Denzongpa, or inhabitants of Denzong, the 
Tibetan name for Sikkim.
The language spoken by the Bhutias in Sikkim is 
Sikkimese, which is 65% intelligible with either Tibetan or Dzongkha, the 
language of Bhutan, although in recent times Nepali is more widely spoken. Most 
Bhutias practice the Nyingmapa school, followed by the Kagyupa school of Tibetan 
Buddhism. The Bhutias are spread out over Nepal, Bhutan, and in the northern 
West Bengal, especially in the towns of Kalimpong and Darjeeling. Bhotey is also 
often used as a derogatory term, used by people of Nepali heritage to describe 
people of Tibetan heritage, although most Bhutias are better off economically 
and educationally among the various Himalayan communities including the 
Nepalese.
The ruling dynasty in Sikkim before the mid 1970s annexation by 
India, was a Bhutia and was from the Namgyal dynasty."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhutia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhotiya
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sikkimese_Tibetan_language 
Both, 
Lepchas and Bhutias, lost their country (Sikkim) when the Indian-instigated, 
tremendous influx of the Nepalese illegal settlers overrun it, and, in 1975, the 
Nepalese voted to abolish the monarchy and incorporate Sikkim into India.
The flag of the Sikkim Bhutia Lepcha Apex Committee (SIBLAC), an organization 
dedicated to safeguard the rights of the indigenous population of Sikkim 
according to the 1973 agreements and the Article 371F of the Indian 
Constitution, is described as: 
"The Sikkim Bhutia Lepcha Apex Committee has 
its own official flag with Saffron and golden colours diagonally intersected at 
45 degree with the dharma chakra at the centre. The upper part has saffron 
colour representing Lhadui, the spiritual Assembly of the Bhutia Lepchas while 
the yellow, at the lower half symbolizes Medui, the Assembly of the laities. The 
golden coloured dharma chakra at the centre reminds one about the virtues act of 
all the sentient being that fulfills peace and prosperity to all in the six 
realms."
http://siblac.com 
Chrystian 
Kretowicz, 6 February 2010